Do Americans have the right to learn whether a foreign
government helped finance the 9/11 attacks? A growing number of congressmen and
senators are demanding that a 28-page portion of a 2002
congressional report finally be declassified. The Obama administration
appears to be resisting, and the stakes are huge. What is contained in those
pages could radically change Americans' perspective of the War on Terror.
The
congressional Joint Inquiry Into Intelligence Community Activities Before
and After the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001, completed its
investigation in December 2002. But the Bush administration
stonewalled the release of the 838-page report until mid-2003 — after its
invasion of Iraq was a fait accompli — and
totally suppressed a key portion. Former senator Bob Graham, D-Fla.,
chairman of the investigation,
declared that "there is compelling evidence in the 28 pages that one or more
foreign governments was involved in assisting some of the hijackers in their
preparation for 9/11." Graham
later indicated that the Saudis were the guilty party. But disclosing Saudi
links to 9/11 could have undermined efforts by some Bush administration
officials to tie Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein to the 9/11 attacks.
Suppressing the 28 pages was intensely controversial at the
time. Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., the vice chairman of the joint inquiry,
urged declassification of almost all of the 28 pages because "the American
people are crying out to know more about who funds, aids and abets terrorist
activities in the world."
Forty-six senators, spearheaded by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and including
almost all the Democratic members, signed a letter to President Bush urging the
release of the 28 pages.
Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C.,
revived the push to declassify those pages in 2013. Jones is a conservative
stalwart best known for coining the phrase "freedom
fries" in 2003 when France opposed invading Iraq. He has since become one of
the most outspoken opponents of reckless U.S. intervention abroad. Jones
explained that he introduced a resolution because "the American people deserve
the truth. Releasing these pages will enhance our national security, not harm
it."
Last month, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., fresh from a bracing
filibuster against the renewal of the Patriot Act, joined the 28-page fight.
Paul introduced the
Transparency for the Families of 9/11 Victims and Survivors Act,
co-sponsored by Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. The
suppressed pages are another wedge between Paul and other Republican
presidential candidates; New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie
rejects declassification, instead urging deference to the president's
judgment on the issue.
Members of Congress
can read the still-classified pages in a special secure room on Capitol Hill
if they get prior permission from the House or Senate Intelligence Committee.
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., one of the few members to go read
the report, was shocked: "I had to stop
every couple of pages and just sort of absorb and try to rearrange my
understanding of history for the past 13 years and the years leading up to that.
It challenges you to rethink everything." Massie is one of
18 co-sponsors ofJones' resolution in the House.
Why is the Obama administration continuing to suppress a
report completed more than a dozen years ago? It is not as if the White House's
credibility would be damaged by revelations of Saudi bankrolling the worst
attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor (15
of the 19 hijackers were Saudis).
And it is not as if the Saudis became squeaky-clean Boy Scouts
after 9/11. Saudi sources are
widely reported to be bankrolling Islamic State terrorists throughout the
Middle East; Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told a Senate committee last September that "I know major Arab allies who
fund" ISIS.
President Obama
just ordered more U.S. troops to Iraq to seek to rebuff the ISIS onslaught.
If the Saudis are helping sow fresh chaos in the Middle East, that is another
reason to disclose their role in an attack that helped launch conflicts that
have already cost thousands of American lives and
more than $1.6 trillion, according to the Congressional Research Service.
"Don't confuse me with the facts" should not be the motto of
the War on Terror. Self-government is an illusion if politicians can shroud the
most important details driving federal policy. If Americans have learned
anything since 9/11, it should be the folly of deferring to Washington secrecy.
James Bovard is the author of
Public Policy Hooligan and a member of USA TODAY's Board of Contributors.
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